Home / Statements / Recognise Us and Listen to Us: Towards Achieving Decent Work for Domestic Workers in Asean

Recognise Us and Listen to Us: Towards Achieving Decent Work for Domestic Workers in Asean

— November 3, 2017

“I always end up having to help fellow domestic workers who do not have food, no day off. This has to change.” – Nasrikah, migrant domestic worker in Malaysia”.

“I’ve been working for 35 years as a domestic worker, but nobody ever asked what my needs are!”
– Malini, migrant domestic worker in Lebanon

These poignant testimonies of Nasrikah and Malini, echo the life situation of millions of domestic workers, who are living in the shadows of society and whose work in the household is viewed as menial and unskilled. However, it is this invisible but invaluable work that enables millions of employers to work and keep their households afloat.

Domestic worker leaders and representatives, domestic workers’ unions and federations, migrant groups and advocates, trade unions, civil society groups, lawyers, academics and members of parliament from ASEAN member countries – Cambodia, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore and Thailand— and other Asian countries (Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Kuwait, Qatar, Jordan, Lebanon, etc.) came together on 22-24 October 2017 in Manila for a regional gathering, to follow-up on decisions and plans agreed at our first Asian regional domestic workers’ conference in 2011 (marking the adoption of ILO Convention 189 on Decent Work for Domestic Workers), and to take stock of the developments six years after the adoption of that landmark treaty.

We reflected and deliberated on the policy changes in relation to domestic work, the real life situation of domestic workers, projects, programmes, priorities, strategies and areas of action. We celebrated our successes and confronted our challenges.

We assessed that while ASEAN Member States have taken measures to increase protection of domestic workers, the overwhelming majority of these workers remain excluded from minimum wage protection, overtime pay, guaranteed weekly day off, social security, and other fair terms of employment. They remain largely excluded from national labour laws and denied their fundamental labour rights, particularly the right to organize and form trade unions.

Access to justice is obstructed by discriminatory, complicated, long administrative and legal procedures; by policy, practical and physical hindrances; by lack of information on legal recourse and redress mechanisms, among others.
Migrant domestic workers, like other low-paid category of workers, receive meager wages which are not enough to sustain their families. They are, therefore, trapped in a vicious cycle of temporary migration because of lack of decent employment opportunities, indebtedness and lack of sustainable reintegration programs.

Even 50 years after its establishment, ASEAN demonstrates a lack of collective political will to address the above issues and provide minimum protection for domestic workers in the region. In 2007, ASEAN committed to put in a place a protection instrument for migrant workers, as enshrined in the ASEAN Declaration on the Protection and Promotion of the Rights of Migrant Workers (Cebu Declaration). At the forthcoming 31st ASEAN Summit in November 2017, ASEAN proposes that the protection instrument to be adopted is a non-binding “Consensus on the Protection and Promotion of the Rights of Migrant Workers”. This falls way short of the principles and commitments of the Cebu Declaration.

The ASEAN Forum on Migrant Labour (AFML) to be held on 25-26 October 2017 in Manila will focus on decent work for domestic workers. We are calling on the ASEAN Member States to listen to the voices of domestic workers, ratify ILO Convention 189, and substantively address the above issues to make decent work a reality.

According to the ILO Assistant Director–General and Regional Director for Asia and the Pacific Tomoko Nishimoto, there are around 10 million domestic workers in Southeast Asia and the Pacific. Domestic workers comprise nearly 20 percent of all migrant workers in the ASEAN region, and majority of them are women. She added that the region’s ageing population, declining fertility rates and the increasing participation of women in the labour force, will mean the continued growth in the demand for domestic workers in ASEAN. Meanwhile, there is already a huge population of, and continued high demand for, domestic workers from ASEAN, in regions outside of ASEAN e.g. Middle East, East Asia, Europe and North America. ASEAN countries should not forget that it is still their responsibility to protect their domestic workers W nationals in these regions.

All these call for urgent and effective policies, instruments and mechanisms to protect and promote the rights of domestic workers. Therefore, we urge ASEAN and the member states to commit to the following:

Protection of domestic workers in labour and social laws

Adhere to core UN standards and the ILO fundamental principles and rights at work, including ILO Convention 189.

Adopt a binding ASEAN instrument for the protection and promotion of the rights of all migrant workers in ASEAN, including domestic workers.

Adopt immediately ILO’s proposed ASEAN Regional Model Competency Standards (RMCS) for Domestic Work, and use these standards as basis for developing national standards and as a regional reference point.

Ensure inclusion of domestic workers in relevant national laws and regulations.

Full coverage should be extended to domestic workers in particular with respect to wages, working hours, overtime compensation, social protection benefits, etc. Wages and benefits should be progressively enhanced towards a living wage and decent working conditions.

Repeal discriminatory policies and practices that infringe upon their labour rights and family and reproductive rights.

Fundamental principles and rights at work for domestic workers

ASEAN should recognise domestic workers’ right to organize and fundamental rights at work (collective bargaining, assembly, etc.). Governments must provide an enabling environment where domestic workers are able to exercise these rights freely and without any intimidation. These rights are guaranteed by Article 3 of C189.

Domestic workers should be able to freely undertake and participate in trade union activities and join unions of their own choice.

Social Protection

Ensure full inclusion of domestic workers in existing social protection systems (social welfare/assistance, social safety net, retirement, insurance/pension schemes, etc). Ensure and provide for the portability of social protection benefits both within the country, and between countries of origin and destination.

Effectively implement the 2013 Regional Framework and Action Plan to Implement the ASEAN Declaration on Strengthening Social protection.

Right to maternity protections, health care (reproductive and gender specific preventive care), gender responsive education and training, adequate housing, insurance schemes, access to essential social services should be explicitly included in employment contracts.

Repeal policies and stop the practice of requiring pregnancy or HIV/AIDS testing as precondition for working abroad, and of contract termination and deportation on the grounds of pregnancy and communicable diseases, such as HIV/AIDS.

End the climate of xenophobia and discrimination

Take measures to eliminate all forms of racial discrimination, marginalization and related intolerance against domestic workers.

About Us

MFA is a regional network of non-government organizations (NGOs), associations and trade unions of migrant workers, and individual advocates in Asia who are committed to protect and promote the rights and welfare of migrant workers.

It is guided by a vision of an alternative world system based on respect for human rights and dignity, social justice, and gender equity, particularly for migrant workers.